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Kevin Hart (poet)

Kevin John Hart (born 5 July 1954) is an Anglo-Australian theologian, philosopher and poet. He is currently Edwin B. Kyle Professor of Christian Studies and Chair of the Religious Studies Department at the University of Virginia.[1] As a theologian and philosopher, Hart's work epitomizes the "theological turn" in phenomenology, with a focus on figures like Maurice Blanchot, Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Luc Marion and Jacques Derrida. He has received multiple awards for his poetry, including the Christopher Brennan Award and the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry twice.

Biography

Hart was born on 5 July 1954 to James Henry Hart and his wife, Rosina Mary Wooton.[2] Hart's family moved to Brisbane, Australia, in 1966.[3] Hart attended secondary school at Oxley State High School,[3] and gained his Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy from the Australian National University.[4] Hart received his PhD from the University of Melbourne in 1986.[2] In 1991 he became Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Monash University, rising to full Professor in 1995 and also becoming Director of the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies and the Institute for Critical and Cultural Studies. He also taught in the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology. Leaving Monash in 2002, he became Professor of Philosophy and Literature at the University of Notre Dame, a position he held until 2007, when he became Edwin B. Kyle Professor of Christian Studies at the University of Virginia,[2] a position he holds as of 2021.[5]

Theology and literary criticism

In his professional life, Kevin Hart is primarily known as a theologian who works in two areas: systematic theology and religion and literature. His work in systematic theology has not yet been collected into volumes but remains as uncollected essays and chapters. In general, Hart's approach is to ground theology in a phenomenology of the Christ, both a phenomenology of Jesus's words and actions, and an account of Jesus as performing epoche and reduction, especially through the parables. On Hart's understanding, the preaching of the Kingdom brings forth Christ's death and that preaching is confirmed by the Resurrection. His work on the Christian mystical tradition is focused on practices of contemplation.[6] In terms of religion and literature, Hart has written extensively on English and French poetry and Christianity, especially Christian mysticism. Recent work has converged on Geoffrey Hill.[7]

One facet of his work is extensive commentary on the writing of the atheist Maurice Blanchot to whom he has devoted four books: The Dark Gaze, The Power of Contestation, Nowhere without No, and Clandestine Encounters. Hart's analysis on Blanchot was praised by Peter Craven as combining "an attractive expository technique with an openness to speculative ideas".[8] His work on Jacques Derrida[9] and Samuel Johnson has also been praised,[10] although one critic said that Hart's work on Johnson was "dubious" "and inconsistent in approach".[11]

Poetry

Hart's interests in poetry were piqued by an English teacher's presentation of Percy Bysshe Shelley's Ozymandias.[12] In addition to Shelley, Hart also cites T. S. Eliot, Charles Baudelaire, Paul Éluard, Vasko Popa, Zbigniew Herbert and Gerard Manley Hopkins as influences.[12] He first began writing poetry as a teenager, partly thanks to a Shelley anthology he had purchased and partly as an excuse to enjoy the Public Library's air conditioning during Brisbane's hot summers.[4]

Critics have noted religious and philosophical themes in Hart's poetry.[4][12][13] As Toby Davidson writes, "Kevin Hart's poetry cannot be separated from his multiple, enduring engagements with mysticism and mystical poetics. He is an innovator, suggesting new approaches to the mystical in the free facets of *attending*."[14] Michael Brennan notes that the philosophical connection stems out of Hart's "long study into phenomenology", specifically connecting Hart's "The Room" to Heidegger's philosophy.[15] Similarly, David McCooey detects the influence of Jacques Derrida, specifically Hart's use of metaphor and perspective.[16]

Erotic and sensual themes are also pronounced in Hart's work. Nathaniel O'Reilly notes, for example, that even though most criticism of Hart focuses on his religious themes, Hart is also an "intensely physical and sensual poet".[17] O'Reilly further says that Hart often links physical sensations with spiritual connections. Hart's volume Flame Tree was considered, then rejected, for the English Literature Victorian Certificate of Education in Victoria, Australia, on grounds of obscenity. The objectionable line was "My semen hot and wild inside your cunt." In his own defense, Hart claimed, "I was very surprised to think that the line could offend 18-year-olds these days. I suppose there will always be parents who are outraged about something in the curriculum.... In Australia ‘cunt’ is often used by lovers, women and men alike, and no offence need be given or taken. It can be said very tenderly...."[18]

Reception

Hart's poetry has garnered multiple awards, including the Greybeal-Gowen Prize for Poetry in 2008,[19] the John Shaw Neilson Poetry Award in 1977, the Mattara Poetry Award in 1982, 11the Wesley Michel Wright Award in 1984, the NSW Premier's Award in 1985, the Victorian Premier's Award in 1985, the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1991 and 1996, the Christopher Brennan Award in 1999.[citation needed]

Critical response to Hart's poetry has varied. Harold Bloom, writing on the back cover of Kevin Hart's 1999 volume of poetry, Wicked Heat, strongly praised Hart, saying that he is the "most outstanding Australian poet of his generation", and one of "the major living poets in the English language".[20] Bloom also names Hart as one of the eleven canonical writers of Australia and New Zealand in his book, The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages, specifically praising Hart's book Peniel and Other Poems.[21] Other critics, such as Cyril Wong and Christian Sheppard, have also praised Hart's poetry.[22][23] Some critics such as Geoffrey Lehmann and Pam Brown, however, have expressed negative views of Hart's work.[24][25] while Christian Sheppard, reviewing the same volume, said "The primary pleasure of Hart's poetry, however, is an easy rhythmed, swiftly flowing line tracing the moment-by-moment impressions of an often impassioned yet always lucid mind".[23] Lehmann, for instance, found Hart's 2008 volume, Young Rain to be self-indulgent and lacking in clear, specific meaning.[24] Kevin Gardner, an American critic and professor, has noted that Hart's poems "have an annoying tendency toward abstraction" and a "narcissistic symbolism" that frustrates with "surreal obfuscation." Examples from Hart's poems that Gardner cites include "the curved eyelids of a young hand," "you kiss / Like a slack orchid tongue in Cairns," death "folded tightly / Like a parachute," "let’s eat the splinters in the house," "And filch a little mouse called fear."[26]

Published works

Books of Poetry
  • The Departure, University of Queensland Press, 1978
  • The Lines of Your Hand, Angus & Robertson, 1981, ISBN 9780207143724
  • Your Shadow, HarperCollins Publishers Australia, 1984, ISBN 9780207149382
  • Peniel Golvan Arts, 1991. ISBN 9780646001524
  • New and Selected Poems HarperCollins Publishers, 1995, ISBN 9780207186011
  • Dark Angel, Dedalus Press, 1996, ISBN 9781873790878
  • Nineteen Songs, Vagabond Press, 1999
  • Wicked Heat Paper Bark Press, 1999, ISBN 9789057040764
  • Madonna, Vagabond Press, 2000
  • Flame Tree Bloodaxe, 2002, ISBN 9781852245450
  • Night Music, Lexicon House, 2003
  • Young Rain Bloodaxe Books, 2009, ISBN 9781852248291
  • Morning Knowledge, University of Notre Dame Press, 2011, ISBN 9780268030933
Criticism
  • Hart, Kevin (1989). The Trespass of the Sign. ISBN 9780823220502.; Fordham Univ Press, 2000, ISBN 9780823220502
  • A. D. Hope, Oxford University Press, 1992, ISBN 9780195532685
  • The Oxford Book of Australian Religious Verse, Oxford University Press, 1994, ISBN 9780195534986
  • Losing the Power to Say ‘I’ (1996)
  • Samuel Johnson and the Culture of Property. Cambridge University Press. 1999. ISBN 9780521651820. Kevin Hart.
  • How to Read a Page of Boswell, Vagabond Press, 2000, ISBN 9780646402727
  • The Fifth Question and After: Poems for Tomas Salamun (2003)
  • The Impossible Vagabond Press, 2006, ISBN 9780975150610
  • Nowhere Without No: In Memory of Maurice Blanchot (editor; 2004)
  • The Power of Contestation: Perspectives on Maurice Blanchot (with Geoffrey Hartman, 2004)
  • Postmodernism: A Beginner’s Guide (2004)
  • The Dark Gaze: Maurice Blanchot and the Sacred. University of Chicago Press. 2004. ISBN 9780226318110.
  • Yvonne Sherwood; Kevin Hart, eds. (2005). Derrida and Religion: Other Testaments. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780415968881.
  • Kevin Hart; Barbara Eileen Wall, eds. (2005). The Experience of God. Fordham University Press. ISBN 9780823225187.
  • Counter-Experiences: Reading Jean-Luc Marion, University of Notre Dame Press, 2007, ISBN 9780268030780 (editor)
  • The Exorbitant: Emmanuel Levinas between Jews and Christians (with Michael A. Signer, 2010)
  • Clandestine Encounters: Philosophy in the Narratives of Maurice Blanchot (2010)
  • Poetry and Revelation: For a Phenomenology of Religious Poetry, Bloomsbury Academic, 2017, ISBN 978-1472598301

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  2. ^ a b c Shivani Singh, ed. (2010). Who's Who in Australia. Crown Content Pty Ltd. p. 976.
  3. ^ a b McCooey, David (2002). . Double Dialogues. 2003 (5). ISSN 1447-9591. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011.
  4. ^ a b c O'Reilly, Nathanael (July 2010). "Wet, Wicked and Wild: Manifestations of Heat in Kevin Hart's Poetry" (PDF). Indian Review of World Literature in English. Indian Institute of World Literature. 6 (2). ISSN 0974-097X.
  5. ^ . University of Virginia. Archived from the original on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  6. ^ Kevin Hart, "Contemplation: Beyond and Beneath," Sophia 48 (2009), 435–59
  7. ^ Kevin Hart, "God’s Little Mountains: Young Geoffrey Hill and the Problem of Religious Poetry," Sacred Worlds: Religion, Literature, and the Imagination (2009), ed. Mark Knight and Louise Lee (Continuum), 23–36; "Transcendence in Tears," Gazing Through a Prim Darkly, ed. Keith Putt (New York: Fordham University Press, 2009), 116–38; and "’it / is true,’" Words of Life: New Theological Turns in French Phenomenology, ed. Bruce Benson and Norman Wirzba (Fordham University Press), 68–86.
  8. ^ Craven, Peter (2001). The Best Australian Essays 2001. Blank Inc. ISBN 978-1-86395-091-6.
  9. ^ Taylor, Gregg (October 2001). "untitled review". The Journal of Religion. 81 (4): 667–668. doi:10.1086/490967. JSTOR 1206085.
  10. ^ McKenzie, Alan T. (Spring 2001). "Making the Wisdom Figure". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 34 (3): 466–470. doi:10.1353/ecs.2001.0030. JSTOR 30053994. S2CID 162196091.
  11. ^ Turner, Katherine (November 2000). "untitled review". The Review of English Studies. 51 (204): 655–657. doi:10.1093/res/51.204.655. JSTOR 519277.
  12. ^ a b c Pradeep, Trikha (June 2010). "Receiving Unintended Gifts: An Interview with Kevin Hart". Antipodes. American Association of Australasian Literary Studies. 24 (1). ISSN 0893-5580.
  13. ^ Paul Kane, "Philosopher-Poets: John Koethe and Kevin Hart," Raritan 21: 1 (2001), 109–110
  14. ^ Toby Davidson "Beyond Reach of Language: Kevin Hart and Christian Mysticism," Literature and Theology 24: 3 (2010), 282
  15. ^ Michael Brennan, "In Absentia: Mourning and Friendship," Jacket 27 (2005)
  16. ^ McCooey, David (1995). "'Secret Truths': the Poetry of Kevin Hart". Southerly. 55 (4): 113.
  17. ^ Nathanael O'Reilly, IRWE 6: 2 (2010), 1
  18. ^ Paul Mitchell Interviews Kevin Hart
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 February 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  20. ^ Hart, Kevin (1999). Wicked Heat. Paper Bark Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-90-5704-076-4.
  21. ^ Bloom, The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1994), p 561
  22. ^ Wong, Cyril (November 2009). . Mascara Literary Review (6). Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  23. ^ a b Sheppard, Christian (2000). "(untitled review of Kevin Hart's Wicked Heat)". Chicago Review. 46 (1): 159–162. doi:10.2307/25304472. JSTOR 25304472.
  24. ^ a b Lehmann, Geoffrey (6 December 2008). "Poetic Intimacies to Be Shared". The Australian. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
  25. ^ Brown, Pam. . Archived from the original on 21 October 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2010. This review was published in a different version in the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper in 2000.
  26. ^ Gardner, Kevin (2012). "(untitled review of Kevin Hart's Morning Knowledge)". Religion and the Arts. 16 (6).

External links

  • "Kevin Hart", Australia – Poetry International Web
  • Lachlan Brown 'Exploring the Shadow of Your Shadow' JASAL Special Issue 2007
  • What We (non)Believe: Reading Poems by Charles Wright, John Burnside, and Kevin Hart from Cordite Poetry Review

kevin, hart, poet, kevin, john, hart, born, july, 1954, anglo, australian, theologian, philosopher, poet, currently, edwin, kyle, professor, christian, studies, chair, religious, studies, department, university, virginia, theologian, philosopher, hart, work, e. Kevin John Hart born 5 July 1954 is an Anglo Australian theologian philosopher and poet He is currently Edwin B Kyle Professor of Christian Studies and Chair of the Religious Studies Department at the University of Virginia 1 As a theologian and philosopher Hart s work epitomizes the theological turn in phenomenology with a focus on figures like Maurice Blanchot Emmanuel Levinas Jean Luc Marion and Jacques Derrida He has received multiple awards for his poetry including the Christopher Brennan Award and the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry twice Contents 1 Biography 2 Theology and literary criticism 3 Poetry 3 1 Reception 4 Published works 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditHart was born on 5 July 1954 to James Henry Hart and his wife Rosina Mary Wooton 2 Hart s family moved to Brisbane Australia in 1966 3 Hart attended secondary school at Oxley State High School 3 and gained his Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy from the Australian National University 4 Hart received his PhD from the University of Melbourne in 1986 2 In 1991 he became Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Monash University rising to full Professor in 1995 and also becoming Director of the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies and the Institute for Critical and Cultural Studies He also taught in the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology Leaving Monash in 2002 he became Professor of Philosophy and Literature at the University of Notre Dame a position he held until 2007 when he became Edwin B Kyle Professor of Christian Studies at the University of Virginia 2 a position he holds as of 2021 5 Theology and literary criticism EditIn his professional life Kevin Hart is primarily known as a theologian who works in two areas systematic theology and religion and literature His work in systematic theology has not yet been collected into volumes but remains as uncollected essays and chapters In general Hart s approach is to ground theology in a phenomenology of the Christ both a phenomenology of Jesus s words and actions and an account of Jesus as performing epoche and reduction especially through the parables On Hart s understanding the preaching of the Kingdom brings forth Christ s death and that preaching is confirmed by the Resurrection His work on the Christian mystical tradition is focused on practices of contemplation 6 In terms of religion and literature Hart has written extensively on English and French poetry and Christianity especially Christian mysticism Recent work has converged on Geoffrey Hill 7 One facet of his work is extensive commentary on the writing of the atheist Maurice Blanchot to whom he has devoted four books The Dark Gaze The Power of Contestation Nowhere without No and Clandestine Encounters Hart s analysis on Blanchot was praised by Peter Craven as combining an attractive expository technique with an openness to speculative ideas 8 His work on Jacques Derrida 9 and Samuel Johnson has also been praised 10 although one critic said that Hart s work on Johnson was dubious and inconsistent in approach 11 Poetry EditHart s interests in poetry were piqued by an English teacher s presentation of Percy Bysshe Shelley s Ozymandias 12 In addition to Shelley Hart also cites T S Eliot Charles Baudelaire Paul Eluard Vasko Popa Zbigniew Herbert and Gerard Manley Hopkins as influences 12 He first began writing poetry as a teenager partly thanks to a Shelley anthology he had purchased and partly as an excuse to enjoy the Public Library s air conditioning during Brisbane s hot summers 4 Critics have noted religious and philosophical themes in Hart s poetry 4 12 13 As Toby Davidson writes Kevin Hart s poetry cannot be separated from his multiple enduring engagements with mysticism and mystical poetics He is an innovator suggesting new approaches to the mystical in the free facets of attending 14 Michael Brennan notes that the philosophical connection stems out of Hart s long study into phenomenology specifically connecting Hart s The Room to Heidegger s philosophy 15 Similarly David McCooey detects the influence of Jacques Derrida specifically Hart s use of metaphor and perspective 16 Erotic and sensual themes are also pronounced in Hart s work Nathaniel O Reilly notes for example that even though most criticism of Hart focuses on his religious themes Hart is also an intensely physical and sensual poet 17 O Reilly further says that Hart often links physical sensations with spiritual connections Hart s volume Flame Tree was considered then rejected for the English Literature Victorian Certificate of Education in Victoria Australia on grounds of obscenity The objectionable line was My semen hot and wild inside your cunt In his own defense Hart claimed I was very surprised to think that the line could offend 18 year olds these days I suppose there will always be parents who are outraged about something in the curriculum In Australia cunt is often used by lovers women and men alike and no offence need be given or taken It can be said very tenderly 18 Reception Edit Hart s poetry has garnered multiple awards including the Greybeal Gowen Prize for Poetry in 2008 19 the John Shaw Neilson Poetry Award in 1977 the Mattara Poetry Award in 1982 11the Wesley Michel Wright Award in 1984 the NSW Premier s Award in 1985 the Victorian Premier s Award in 1985 the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1991 and 1996 the Christopher Brennan Award in 1999 citation needed Critical response to Hart s poetry has varied Harold Bloom writing on the back cover of Kevin Hart s 1999 volume of poetry Wicked Heat strongly praised Hart saying that he is the most outstanding Australian poet of his generation and one of the major living poets in the English language 20 Bloom also names Hart as one of the eleven canonical writers of Australia and New Zealand in his book The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages specifically praising Hart s book Peniel and Other Poems 21 Other critics such as Cyril Wong and Christian Sheppard have also praised Hart s poetry 22 23 Some critics such as Geoffrey Lehmann and Pam Brown however have expressed negative views of Hart s work 24 25 while Christian Sheppard reviewing the same volume said The primary pleasure of Hart s poetry however is an easy rhythmed swiftly flowing line tracing the moment by moment impressions of an often impassioned yet always lucid mind 23 Lehmann for instance found Hart s 2008 volume Young Rain to be self indulgent and lacking in clear specific meaning 24 Kevin Gardner an American critic and professor has noted that Hart s poems have an annoying tendency toward abstraction and a narcissistic symbolism that frustrates with surreal obfuscation Examples from Hart s poems that Gardner cites include the curved eyelids of a young hand you kiss Like a slack orchid tongue in Cairns death folded tightly Like a parachute let s eat the splinters in the house And filch a little mouse called fear 26 Published works EditBooks of PoetryThe Departure University of Queensland Press 1978 The Lines of Your Hand Angus amp Robertson 1981 ISBN 9780207143724 Your Shadow HarperCollins Publishers Australia 1984 ISBN 9780207149382 Peniel Golvan Arts 1991 ISBN 9780646001524 New and Selected Poems HarperCollins Publishers 1995 ISBN 9780207186011 Dark Angel Dedalus Press 1996 ISBN 9781873790878 Nineteen Songs Vagabond Press 1999 Wicked Heat Paper Bark Press 1999 ISBN 9789057040764 Madonna Vagabond Press 2000 Flame Tree Bloodaxe 2002 ISBN 9781852245450 Night Music Lexicon House 2003 Young Rain Bloodaxe Books 2009 ISBN 9781852248291 Morning Knowledge University of Notre Dame Press 2011 ISBN 9780268030933CriticismHart Kevin 1989 The Trespass of the Sign ISBN 9780823220502 Fordham Univ Press 2000 ISBN 9780823220502 A D Hope Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 9780195532685 The Oxford Book of Australian Religious Verse Oxford University Press 1994 ISBN 9780195534986 Losing the Power to Say I 1996 Samuel Johnson and the Culture of Property Cambridge University Press 1999 ISBN 9780521651820 Kevin Hart How to Read a Page of Boswell Vagabond Press 2000 ISBN 9780646402727 The Fifth Question and After Poems for Tomas Salamun 2003 The Impossible Vagabond Press 2006 ISBN 9780975150610 Nowhere Without No In Memory of Maurice Blanchot editor 2004 The Power of Contestation Perspectives on Maurice Blanchot with Geoffrey Hartman 2004 Postmodernism A Beginner s Guide 2004 The Dark Gaze Maurice Blanchot and the Sacred University of Chicago Press 2004 ISBN 9780226318110 Yvonne Sherwood Kevin Hart eds 2005 Derrida and Religion Other Testaments Psychology Press ISBN 9780415968881 Kevin Hart Barbara Eileen Wall eds 2005 The Experience of God Fordham University Press ISBN 9780823225187 Counter Experiences Reading Jean Luc Marion University of Notre Dame Press 2007 ISBN 9780268030780 editor The Exorbitant Emmanuel Levinas between Jews and Christians with Michael A Signer 2010 Clandestine Encounters Philosophy in the Narratives of Maurice Blanchot 2010 Poetry and Revelation For a Phenomenology of Religious Poetry Bloomsbury Academic 2017 ISBN 978 1472598301References Edit Kevin Hart Department of Religious Studies Arts amp Sciences U Va Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2011 a b c Shivani Singh ed 2010 Who s Who in Australia Crown Content Pty Ltd p 976 a b McCooey David 2002 In Dialogue with Kevin Hart Double Dialogues 2003 5 ISSN 1447 9591 Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 a b c O Reilly Nathanael July 2010 Wet Wicked and Wild Manifestations of Heat in Kevin Hart s Poetry PDF Indian Review of World Literature in English Indian Institute of World Literature 6 2 ISSN 0974 097X Kevin Hart Department of Religious Studies Arts amp Sciences U Va University of Virginia Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2011 Kevin Hart Contemplation Beyond and Beneath Sophia 48 2009 435 59 Kevin Hart God s Little Mountains Young Geoffrey Hill and the Problem of Religious Poetry Sacred Worlds Religion Literature and the Imagination 2009 ed Mark Knight and Louise Lee Continuum 23 36 Transcendence in Tears Gazing Through a Prim Darkly ed Keith Putt New York Fordham University Press 2009 116 38 and it is true Words of Life New Theological Turns in French Phenomenology ed Bruce Benson and Norman Wirzba Fordham University Press 68 86 Craven Peter 2001 The Best Australian Essays 2001 Blank Inc ISBN 978 1 86395 091 6 Taylor Gregg October 2001 untitled review The Journal of Religion 81 4 667 668 doi 10 1086 490967 JSTOR 1206085 McKenzie Alan T Spring 2001 Making the Wisdom Figure Eighteenth Century Studies 34 3 466 470 doi 10 1353 ecs 2001 0030 JSTOR 30053994 S2CID 162196091 Turner Katherine November 2000 untitled review The Review of English Studies 51 204 655 657 doi 10 1093 res 51 204 655 JSTOR 519277 a b c Pradeep Trikha June 2010 Receiving Unintended Gifts An Interview with Kevin Hart Antipodes American Association of Australasian Literary Studies 24 1 ISSN 0893 5580 Paul Kane Philosopher Poets John Koethe and Kevin Hart Raritan 21 1 2001 109 110 Toby Davidson Beyond Reach of Language Kevin Hart and Christian Mysticism Literature and Theology 24 3 2010 282 Michael Brennan In Absentia Mourning and Friendship Jacket 27 2005 McCooey David 1995 Secret Truths the Poetry of Kevin Hart Southerly 55 4 113 Nathanael O Reilly IRWE 6 2 2010 1 Paul Mitchell Interviews Kevin Hart The Graybeal Gowen Prize for Virginia Poets Washington and Lee University Archived from the original on 4 February 2011 Retrieved 5 October 2010 Hart Kevin 1999 Wicked Heat Paper Bark Press p 88 ISBN 978 90 5704 076 4 Bloom The Western Canon The Books and School of the Ages New York Harcourt Brace 1994 p 561 Wong Cyril November 2009 Cyril Wong reviews Young Rain by Kevin Hart Mascara Literary Review 6 Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 26 August 2010 a b Sheppard Christian 2000 untitled review of Kevin Hart s Wicked Heat Chicago Review 46 1 159 162 doi 10 2307 25304472 JSTOR 25304472 a b Lehmann Geoffrey 6 December 2008 Poetic Intimacies to Be Shared The Australian Retrieved 5 February 2009 Brown Pam Reviews of Five Books of Poems Published by Paperbark Pres Archived from the original on 21 October 2009 Retrieved 26 August 2010 This review was published in a different version in the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper in 2000 Gardner Kevin 2012 untitled review of Kevin Hart s Morning Knowledge Religion and the Arts 16 6 External links Edit Kevin Hart Australia Poetry International Web Lachlan Brown Exploring the Shadow of Your Shadow JASAL Special Issue 2007 What We non Believe Reading Poems by Charles Wright John Burnside and Kevin Hart from Cordite Poetry Review Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kevin Hart poet amp oldid 1105999733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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